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Short-term wins, long-term cost: Is Bangladesh cricket missing the bigger picture?
With spin-friendly pitches and conservative selections, Bangladesh's developmental priorities in recent A-series are under scrutiny © Getty
Can Bangladesh cricket progress with a win-at-all-costs mindset?
That question is relevant following the home series against South Africa Emerging and New Zealand A, when it seemed they are ready to compromise their development in order to earn short-term success.
During the three-match one-day series against the South Africa Emerging side, the hosts appeared reluctant to fully embrace the challenge after the series was level at 1-1. In the decider, Bangladesh chose a route that prioritised victory over growth, leaning on their spin-heavy attack instead of giving their young pacers a platform to test themselves.
This approach was surprising given that the Emerging side was primarily composed of players from the BCB's High Performance Unit - the very group expected to grow through these matches. Yet Bangladesh picked conditions and combinations that favoured spin, allowing them to win the series 2-1 but offering little in terms of meaningful exposure to fast-bowling challenges.
A similar strategy was adopted in the four-day game against South Africa Emerging in Chattogram. The focus seemed entirely on securing a result rather than investing in the bigger picture.
Ideally, Bangladesh could have prepared sporting wickets to test their pace bowlers and help their batters learn to cope with quality fast bowling. Instead, they opted for a safer spin-reliant route - a decision that may have helped them win but arguably impeded the development such series are meant to serve.
Khaled Mahmud, former national captain and current BCB game development chairman, expressed his dismay at the decisions made during these series.
"I think we always raise questions regarding the wickets and how we can develop our fast bowlers - but how are we encouraging them by playing in this manner? So many fast bowlers are coming through, but are we giving them a platform to perform?" Mahmud told Cricbuzz on Sunday.
"Neither our batsmen learned how to score against quality fast bowlers, nor did our pacers get the chance to bowl to batsmen who are used to pace, coming from environments where it's abundant," he said.
"We're playing with a mindset of winning matches by preparing spin-friendly wickets - but at the junior level, we cannot afford that. In international cricket, we can justify preparing slow wickets like we did against Australia and New Zealand because points and other stakes were involved. But why are we doing this here? These matches aren't about winning or losing. Our concern should be learning. I don't think it's right to go with one pacer when we are considering three pacers in our ODI lineup."
In the opening match of the two-game four-day series, Bangladesh fielded a balanced XI with six batters and five bowlers. But after losing that game, they adopted a more conservative approach in the second, picking seven batters and only four bowlers - just one of whom was a pacer - for the match at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium.
The match ended in a draw, but it left an important question hanging: did this approach serve the purpose of long-term development? Only time will tell if these decisions bear any fruit.
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